The permit for the memorial submitted by Granvel Block claimed it would be a “veterans” memorial and not a “confederate veterans” memorial.

The memorial stands within view of motorists on westbound Interstate 10 (see flyer, circulated by Block, below). The property and memorial lie on Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., a main thoroughfare and one the city’s main arteries.

Block subsequently sold the property and memorial to the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

He publicly claims that he is no longer involved.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans claims that the site is managed by the Orange, Texas chapter of their group. Block is the leader of that chapter.

Privately, in conversations with Orange residents and at least one member of the Repurpose movement, Block has revealed that he does, in fact, manage the site.

He also revealed (and it is widely known in the community) that he doesn’t want his wife, Denise Block, to know about his involvement.

She was asked to leave her job as an educator at Community Church in Orange after the school informed her that her family’s values didn’t align with the school’s.

It’s also widely believed in the community that she disapproves of the memorial and her husband’s involvement.

Groups of local pastors, business leaders, and even the city of Orange government have asked Block to engage in discussions of how the memorial is affecting and will affect the community and public perception of the community.

The city has offered to buy the property.

Block refuses to engage with community members who oppose the memorial.

Block has threatened opposition organizers with violence, telling at least one that “I’m a Texas boy and I’m going to kick your ass.”

The 97-year-old grandmother of one of the opposition organizers received an anonymous letter alleging that her granddaughter’s husband fraudulently obtained a graduate degree and that he is not the biological father of her great-grandchildren. The unsigned letter also purports to describe her granddaughter’s sexuality.

Orange residents have reported hearing Block regularly use the “n” word when referring to blacks.

An artist’s rendering of the site, circulated by Block, follows below. It includes his home address and cell phone number. Click the image for a larger version.

Although Block refuses to share information on the memorial’s future, he recently began work on the site again. Please join us on September 22 as we protest Block and the memorial. It’s our goal to let Block and the Sons of Confederate Veterans know that the overwhelming majority of Orange residents oppose the memorial and that its conspicuous location doesn’t align with community values in Orange.

6 thoughts on “Granvel Block is the Sons of Confederate Veterans member behind the new confederate memorial in Orange, Texas”

Its not about hate its about heritage for all those who protest a persons or people’s heritage your no better or different than the people who kept slaves your trying to force your beliefs on others who dont see things the way you do your trying to force your way trying to inslave us to your way of life and beliefs

Do a better job choosing your symbols of heritage. The Confederacy and all its symbols were created to preserve the inhumane ownership and treatment of other human beings, flown for hate, and symbolize hate, racism, and inequality, a heritage no one should want to be associated with. The Confederacy was a four-year treasonous experiment that died the horrible death it deserved. Nothing to be proud of at all.

“It’s often forgotten that Lee himself, after the Civil War, opposed monuments, specifically Confederate war monuments. Lee believed countries that erased visible signs of civil war recovered from conflicts quicker. He was worried that by keeping these symbols alive, it would keep the divisions alive.”